When are river-training works required? Identify the regimes that commonly necessitate groynes, guide bunds, spurs, or similar measures.

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: All of the above

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:

River-training works stabilize channels, protect banks, and manage planform. They are applied in varied morphodynamic settings—where a river swings (meanders), builds its bed (aggrades), or erodes its bed (degrades). The type and layout of training measures respond to the specific instability observed.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • General, alluvial river behavior considered.
  • Training works include spurs, groynes, guide bunds, revetments, and vanes.
  • Objective: channel stabilization, alignment control, and asset protection (bridges, levees).


Concept / Approach:

Meandering threatens banks through lateral migration; aggradation shoals the approach to hydraulic structures reducing conveyance; degradation deepens bed levels undermining foundations. In each case, river-training measures may be required to re-distribute flow, armor banks, or confine alignment.


Step-by-Step Solution:

For meandering: use groynes/revetments to restrain lateral swing and protect outer banks.For aggradation: employ guide bunds/training walls to confine the low-flow channel and flush bars.For degradation: provide toe protection, aprons, or check structures to arrest excessive scour.


Verification / Alternative check:

Case histories around bridges show all three regimes can require training to ensure stable approach flow and safeguard abutments/piers.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • Only during floods: Training may be required under normal conditions; flooding simply amplifies existing tendencies.
  • Limiting to one regime ignores the breadth of applications for river-training works.


Common Pitfalls:

  • Prescribing a generic layout without diagnosing whether the reach is aggrading or degrading; the remedy must match the morphodynamics.


Final Answer:

All of the above

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